Landscape

Landscape photography is among the most common genres, perhaps second only to portraits. Landscapes need large depth of field. Generally speaking, the smaller the focal length you use, the larger the depth of field. For landscapes, wide and ultra-wide lenses are generally used. With such small focal lengths, you might think that aperture plays almost no role:

This is an extremely wide lens, and so practically everything is sharp even with a minimal f number. And yet even still, it’s beneficial to go higher. First, this is the lens’s optimum setup (since at smaller values, lens defects appear), and it makes the picture even sharper. Second, to make the picture more interesting, it can be good to include an object in the foreground, and to do that, your depth of field needs to be truly huge:

Nevertheless, for a classical landscape photo, you want it as sharp as it can be. Connoisseurs will want to learn the “hyperfocal distance” for their lenses and their precise (or at least approximate) focal length, to get the largest depth of field possible.

Achieving Blurring with Small Sensors

For full-frame-sensor cameras, getting deliberately blurred backgrounds is easy. But most cameras’ sensors aren’t that large. If you want to make photographed objects pop out from their backgrounds as if you had a full-frame, there are two ways that you can at least roughly achieve it: using a larger focal length (e.g. a telephoto lens) or moving closer towards the photographed object without changing the focal length.

When you’re standing far back from a landscape, blurring is hard to achieve (about all you can do is stitch together a lot of photos taken using the Brenizer method), but for closer objects, background blurring is quite possible.

A camera with an APS-C sensor and a cheap telephoto lens is capable of blurring the second tiger.Canon 40D, Canon EF-S 55–250/4–5.6, 1/1000 s, f/4.5, ISO 800, focus 149 mm

Even when you’re blurring the background, you should take your surroundings into account and incorporate them into the picture in a way that makes it clear where the main subject resides and what role it plays there. The blurring itself can help you highlight a specific detail in a scene:

This is one possible look you can use for travel photographs and reportage photos from events—often you want to capture a specific object and put it “subtly” in the context of its surroundings.

Product Photography

Towards the opposite end of the scale is product photography. You want photos in e.g. an e-shop to be as sharp as possible. Here people reach for f/8, f/16, and even higher. Even despite this, occasionally not all of a product is completely sharp. This problem is especially evident for small products, because small focal lengths mean small depth of field:

Not even a camera with an APS-C sensor and an f/16 aperture could make this whole magnifying glass sharp. Canon 40D, Canon EF-S 55–250/4–5.6, 1/200 s, f/16, ISO 100, focus 194 mm

The solution for this problem is “focus stacking,” that is, taking multiple pictures from a tripod, with each of them being focused a few centimeters or millimeters apart. Certain specialized software (such as Helicon Focus) can then precisely align the photographs and pick the sharpest areas out of the individual photos and join those into one picture.

Of course even for products you can do compositions that deliberately use a smaller depth of field—but these are rather special cases.

Macro

Macro photography puts us at the absolute extreme. Here the depth of field is minimal—often only one millimeter!

But you can still work with higher f numbers, or focus stacking. Even with these, a blurry background is practically inevitable. But that’s not really a negative; it’s just something that you need to take into account.

In the picture below, the tip of the pen is sharp, while the rest of the room in the background is (inevitably) very blurry.

A Creative Approach

Although the examples above show what’s typical for this photographic genre, there’s always room for your own approach and for experiments that flaunt established rules. Even though, for example, we tend to imagine a mountain photo as sharp through-and-through, you can put a deliberately blurred area into the foreground of such a picture to give it depth:

So take this article as a start, not the end. Whenever a creative solution occurs to you, definitely explore it. Experiments can sometimes fail, but in our digital age, creative photo experiments are practically free.

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Author: Vit Kovalcik

I’ve been a freelancer since early 2012; photography is my living. I acquired my photography experience, both inside and outside the studio, during the previous years—when I was working all day and taking pictures every evening and weekend. I don’t have just one clearly defined topic; I like photographing people, but also cityscapes and landscapes.